And a landscape less populated Than this one. Even so, to us it looks very odd Never to see an only child engrossed In a game it has made up, a pair of friends Making fun in a private lingo, Or a body sauntering by himself who is not Wanting, even as it perplexes Our ears when cats are called Cat and dogs either Lupo, Nero or Bobby. Their dining Puts us to shame: we can only envy a people So frugal by nature it costs them No effort not to guzzle and swill. Yet (if I Read their faces rightly after ten years) They are without hope. The Greeks used to call the Sun He-who-smites-from-afar, and from here, where Shadows are dagger-edged, the daily ocean blue, I can see what they meant: his unwinking Outrageous eye laughs to scorn any notion Of change or escape, and a silent Ex-volcano, without a stream or a bird, Echoes that laugh. This could be a reason Why they take the silencers off their Vespas, Turn their radios up to full volume, And a minim saint can expect rockets-noise As a counter-magic, a way of saying Boo to the Three Sisters: 'Mortal we may be, But we are still here!' might cause them to hanker After proximities-in streets packed solid With human flesh, their souls feel immune To all metaphysical threats. We are rather shocked, But we need shocking: to accept space, to own That surfaces need not be superficial Nor gestures vulgar, cannot really Be taught within earshot of running water Or in sight of a cloud. As pupils We are not bad, but hopeless as tutors: Goethe, Tapping homeric hexameters On the shoulder-blade of a Roman girl, is (I wish it were someone else) the figure Of all our stamp: no doubt he treated her well, But one would draw the line at calling The Helena begotten on that occasion, Queen of his Second Walpurgisnacht, Her baby: between those who mean by a life a Bildungsroman and those to whom living Means to-be-visible-now, there yawns a gulf Embraces cannot bridge. If we try To 'go southern', we spoil in no time, we grow Flabby, dingily lecherous, and Forget to pay bills: that no one has heard of them Taking the Pledge or turning to Yoga Is a comforting thought-in that case, for all The spiritual loot we tuck away, We do them no harm-and entitles us, I think To one little scream at A piacere, Not two. Go I must, but I go grateful (even To a certain Monte) and invoking My sacred meridian names, Vito, Verga, Pirandello, Bernini, Bellini, To bless this region, its vendages, and those Who call it home: though one cannot always Remember exactly why one has been happy, There is no forgetting that one was.

September 1958

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